is, however, an important parameter to take into account. The
longer the reporter gene, the more ribosomes can be present
on the mRNA simultaneously, affecting the brightness of the
translation sites. The use of longer reporter genes (1–2 kb) is
therefore advisable and will facilitate further analysis.
- Cloning the SunTag peptide array sequence. The SunTag pep-
tide array contains a somewhat repetitive sequence and is there-
fore difficult to amplify by PCR. The SunTag sequence is codon
scrambled (i.e., different codons are used to encode the same
amino acid sequence in each peptide) to minimize the degree of
repeated nucleotide sequences. Codon scrambling allows PCR
amplification to some extent, but some clones after PCR-based
cloning will have small deletions. Therefore, cloning strategies
that circumvent PCR-based amplification of this sequence are
preferable. - The number of SunTag peptides in the reporter gene. The
reporter construct that is used by us and others [2–5] generally
contains 24 SunTag peptides. However, shorter arrays (five or
ten copies of the SunTag peptide [5]) or longer arrays (56
copies [2]) can also be used to image translation). Comparison
between reporter mRNAs containing either 5, 10 or 24 Sun-
Tag copies revealed that ribosome density on these mRNAs was
very similar, indicating that increased number of SunTag pep-
tides does not detectably alter translation initiation or elonga-
tion rates of the reporter mRNA. Lowering the number of
SunTag peptides will make the imaging of translation sites,
especially at low ribosome occupancy, more challenging as it
decreases the translation-associated GFP signal. Therefore,
having a high copy number of SunTag peptides will be favor-
able in most situations. However, some specific experimental
setups, such as the integration of the SunTag sequence into an
endogenous gene locus by CRISPR/Cas9, may benefit from
the use of shorter and less repetitive peptide arrays. - Using an inducible promoter to express a reporter mRNA. The
advantage of using an inducible promoter is that it allows
temporal control of mRNA synthesis. Expressing the reporter
mRNA only during the imaging experiment has two main
advantages; first, it prevents accumulation of high level of
relatively bright mature SunTag proteins, which hinders the
imaging of translation sites. (See also Note 13 about the
expression level of the translational reporter.) Second, limiting
the levels of mature SunTag protein will also prevent depletion
of the freely diffusible pool of scFv-GFP antibody from the
cytoplasm. If mature SunTag protein levels become too high,
the majority of scFv-GFP is bound to mature protein and is
therefore not available to bind nascent SunTag peptides at
translation sites. As a consequence, newly made SunTag
398 Suzan Ruijtenberg et al.